Making an Insurance Claim Checklist

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Owning and operating a business is a tough job. Besides the day-to-day duties of managing employees, staying within your budget, and keeping your customers happy (and coming back), there is the reality of business losses from matters that may be out of your control. This is where business insurance can help.

Preparing for Business Losses

Preparation is the best strategy for dealing with business losses and insurance claims. You should have an accessible list of all of your business property so you have a point of reference when you are determining what has been damaged, stolen, or lost. Stopping, and recovering from, embezzlement is much easier if your record keeping system is organized and current. Finally, do not delay in gathering and preserving evidence, identifying witnesses, and informing your insurer of losses--evidence and witnesses disappear.

Use the following insurance claim checklist as an aid to organizing and justifying your claim. If you are still unsure how to make a claim or have legal questions, speak to an attorney to help inform you of your rights and responsibilities. For more information, see FindLaw's Business Liability and Insurance section.

Collect receipts and other documents that show what you paid for your damaged property.

Contact witnesses and record their statements and contact information.

Review your policy before you contact your agent. Make sure you don't say anything that the agent may use as a basis of denying your claim.

Request a claim form from your insurer.

Start a log documenting your claim, which includes dates, summaries of conversations, and names, titles and contact information for claims personnel. This will protect you from accusations that claims delays were your fault and will provide time-saving information if the insurance company switches your adjuster.

Determine the time limit for filing your claim and get your claim in on time.

List the losses you can determine within the time limit and attach an addendum that states that the list is partial and you are still gathering information. This may protect you in the event that you discover losses after the claim period has expired.

When a person is injured on your premises or by one of your employees, if it is appropriate, get a statement from them. Do not admit fault

Report a third party's injury to your insurer and ask for advice about how to discuss it with the public and your employees. Your comments may come back to haunt you in a lawsuit.

Contact your agent or insurance company immediately if you are served with a lawsuit or informed that an injured person is going to sue you.

If you have been served with a lawsuit by someone injured on your property or otherwise, contact an attorney today to help you mitigate your liability. A skilled business and commercial law attorney will be able to explain the law to you and negotiate on behalf of your business.

Next Steps

Contact a qualified business attorney to help you navigate business liability and insurance issues.